Send News. Want a reply? Read this. More in the FAQ.   News Forum - All Forums - Mobile - PDA - RSS Headlines  RSS Headlines   Twitter  Twitter
Customize
User Settings
Styles:
LAN Parties
Upcoming one-time events:
Redding, CA 06/22
Tampa, FL 06/26
Tampa, FL 10/04

Regularly scheduled events

New ESRB Digital Ratings

The ESRB, announces a new rating system for digitally delivered games that will offer parents more information while offering developers and publishers a free service:

This morning, ESRB announced a new streamlined, no-cost service for rating all digitally delivered games (console download games, online games, streaming, social network games, etc.). Also, this new Digital Rating Service will not only assess content and age appropriateness, but now adds interactive elements that matter a great deal to parents, such as sharing personal information or physical location and exposure to unfiltered user-generated content.

For consumers, especially parents, this new service means extending a single, consistent and credible rating standard across the many platforms on which their kids can access content. Parents concerns now extend beyond just content; they want ratings to address sharing of kids’ personal information or interaction with others.

For the game developers, the streamlined rating process makes obtaining an ESRB rating fast and easy by assigning a rating immediately. By simplifying the process and eliminating the cost to developers, ESRB expects to broaden adoption of its ratings among game providers of all types. ESRB’s Digital Rating Service joins the CTIA Mobile Application Rating System with ESRB, which was launched last year and uses a similar process to assign ESRB ratings to mobile apps.

View
1 Replies. 1 pages. Viewing page 1.
< Newer [ 1 ] Older >

1. Re: New ESRB Digital Ratings Oct 24, 2012, 22:12 ViRGE
 
It sounds like this is going to be self-submitted ratings, but I'm not surprised. It would be impossible for the ESRB to review every game, not to mention expensive for developers.

PC Magazine has a better writeup on this: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2411375,00.asp

Basically the ESRB will be providing developers with a survey they can use to figure out what rating their game would fall under, along with the introduction of 3 new "Interactive Elements" ratings that provide secondary information about what information the game may share (user info, location, and person-to-person interaction).
 
Reply Quote Edit Delete Report
 
1 Replies. 1 pages. Viewing page 1.
< Newer [ 1 ] Older >


footer

.. ..

Blue's News logo